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Transcript
The Concept of Ergativity
Pradeep Kumar Das
Ergativity is a term used in traditional descriptive and typological linguistics to
refer to a system of nominal case marking where the subject of an intransitive verb has
the same morphological marker as a direct object, and a different morphological marker
from the subject of a transitive verb (Comrie1978:329). In other words, a language can be
characterized as an ergative language if the subject of an intransitive verb and the object
of a transitive verb are grouped together alike with regard to case morphology i.e. both
should occur in an absolutive case. This implies that all subjects are not treated in the
same way in an ergative language in terms of case marking and some other grammatical
relations. According to the terminology articulated by Dixon, an ergative language is one
which groups subject of intransitive verbs (SI) with the direct object of transitive verbs
(DO) with regard to a number of syntactic phenomena such as case marking, verb
agreement, participialization and conjunct reduction (Butt 1995). In contrast, accusative
languages do not make such distinction and treat subjects of intransitive and transitive
verbs alike. In most of the European languages, there is one distinct nominative case that
expresses the subject of the sentence irrespective of ± transitivity of the verb, and the
accusative case helps us to identify the direct object. For example, in Latin we would say:
17.
puer
venit
18.
puer
puellAm
boy -3MS- Nom
girl-3FS-Acc
boy -3MS-Nom
‘ The boy comes’.
come-3MS -Pres
‘The boy loves the girl’.
AmAt
love-3MS-Pres
(Comrie 1973)
Unlike Latin, Basque, an ergative language, does not treat the subject of ±
transitive clauses in the same way and thus the expression of subject and direct object is
different from that of Latin. Let us see the examples given below:
1
19.
20.
miren
etorri
dA
Mary-3FS
‘Mary came’.
come-3FS
be-pst
yon-ek
pAtxi
jo
du
John-3MS-Erg
Bill-3MS
hit-3MS
be-pst
‘John hit Bill’.
(adopted from Comrie 1973)
In (19), the subject ‘miren’ has no overt inflection, while in (20) the subject has an
overt inflection ‘-ek’ and again the direct object ‘patxi’ has no such inflection. The
examples (19-20) show that the subject of (19) and the direct object of (20) are in the
same case form i.e. the absolutive case, while the subject of (20) has a distinct case i.e. an
ergative case. This instance exemplifies that in Basque the subject of an intransitive verb
and the direct object of a transitive verb stand in the same case, while there is an ergative
case ending with the subject of a transitive verb.
Hindi-Urdu has been termed as a split-ergative language in the literature (Dixon
1979, Bittner and Hale 1993, Pandharipande and Kachru 1977 and Butt 1995). The term
split-ergative is associated with Hindi as the occurrence of ergative case is conditioned
by transitivity and perfective aspect. In other words, Hindi-Urdu employs ergative
marker ‘-ne’ with the subject, (except few exceptions), when the main verb of the clause
is a transitive one and it is either in perfective aspect or in simple past form. However,
there are researchers who claim that Hindi-Urdu does not meet the required conditions
for ergativity or split-ergativity in a ‘deeper’ sense (see Kachru 1987, Kachru and
Pandharipande (1978). They have discussed various aspects of grammatical processes
such as verb agreement, participialization, conjunction reduction, reflexivization, equiNP deletion and raising etc. On the basis of their findings, they claim that subject of
intransitive (SI) is not always grouped with the direct object of the transitive verb (DO);
rather in some cases, the SI behaves more like an A (agent; i.e. the subject of a transitive
verb). The bottom line of their discussion is that for some syntactic processes, the subject
status of a given NP is relevant irrespective of the ± ergativity of it, while for some other
syntactic processes, the case marking on a given NP becomes the most relevant element
2
for the analysis.
The discussion in Kachru (1987), Kachru and Pandharipande (1977) is not without
flaws, however, the later part of their explanation i.e. the case marking on a given NP
becomes the most relevant element, seems to be an useful finding. This allows us to argue
that when the subject of a transitive verb is marked with an overt ergative case marker,
the verb agrees with the direct object which is a bare NP in the clause. Here are the
examples of object-verb agreement in Hindi-Urdu:
21.
k´rim-ne
roti
kHAyi
Karim-3MS-Erg
bread-FS-Acc
eat-perf-FS
s´mirA-ne
bHAt
kHAyA
Samira-3FS-Erg
rice-MS-Acc
eat-perf-MS
soh´n-ne
kele
kH´ride
Sohan-3MS-Erg
banana-MPl-Acc
buy-perf-MPl
‘Karim ate/had bread’.
22.
‘Samira ate/had rice’.
23.
‘Sohan bought the bananas’.
The examples (21-23) show that each subject of these clauses bears an overt case marker
i.e. ‘-ne’. The ergative marker ‘-ne’ in Hindi-Urdu occurs with the subject of a clause
when the main verb is in perfective form or in past simple form and the subject behaves
or functions like an agent.
3
The basic understanding of the ‘agreement phenomenon’ evokes a wellestablished system of language typology which classifies languages into two broad
types, ‘Nominative-accusative’ and ‘Ergative-absolutive’. What characterizes these
language types is primarily the way languages case mark the nominals (different
nominal arguments) in different kinds of grammatical constructions, which show a
correlation with the ‘agreement pattern’ available in languages. Let us briefly
highlight the issue of ‘Ergativity’ here. According to the terminology articulated by
Dixon, an ergative language is one which groups subject of intransitive verbs (SI) with
the direct object of transitive verbs (DO) with regard to a number of syntactic
phenomena such as case marking (as both should occur in absolutive i.e. nominative
case as mentioned by Dixon 1994:1) and verb agreement (the verb should agree with
either of these nominals). In other words, a language can be characterized as an
ergative language if the subject of an intransitive verb and the object of a transitive
verb are grouped together alike with regard to case morphology i.e. both should occur
in an absolutive (which is also nominative in some ways) case and the agreement
morphology i.e. these two nominals in absolutive case should trigger agreement on to
the verb. This implies that not all the subjects in an Ergative language are treated in
the same way with regard to the case marking and some other grammatical operations.
In contrast, languages which are classified as ‘Nominative-accusative’ (often
termed as accusative languages) do not make such distinction between the subjects of
intransitive and transitive clauses with regard to the case grammar or verb
morphology. In other words, languages pertaining to this type treat subjects of
intransitive and transitive verbs alike. In most of the European languages, there is one
distinct nominative case that expresses the subject of the sentence irrespective of ±
transitivity of the verb, and the accusative case helps us to identify the direct object.
4
The diagram given below makes this clearer:
Ergative-Absolutive:
Agreement
1.
dçrtA
hE
run-3MS
be-pres
l´rkA -O
boy-3MS-Abso
‘The boy runs’.
Agreement
kHA-yi
roti -O
2. l´rke-ne
boy-3MS-obl-Erg
bread-f-Abso
eat-perf-3FS
‘The boy ate the bread’.
Nominative-Accusative:
Agreement
3.
puer - O
boy -3PMS-Nom
‘ The boy comes’.
4.
puer - O
boy -3PMS- Nom
(Data from Latin)
venit
come-3PMS -Pres
Agreement
puellAm
AmAt
girl-3PFS-Acc
love-3PMS-Pres
‘The boy loves the girl’.
(Comrie 1973:1)
5
Therefore,
A
Sub of V +T
S
Sub of V -T
Ergative
Nominative
Accusative O/P
Absolutive
The whole sketch looks a bit messy, but this is what we need to do if we want
to explain the complexes of these two language types in an explicit way. The
examples of Hindi-Urdu in (1-2) is quite clear with the help of the arrows and boxes
drawn in the diagram. The verb-morphology of the language demonstrates that the
subject of an intransitive and the object of a transitive verb are in absolutive case form
(i.e. nominative case) as both of them trigger agreement on the verbs. We can posit a
query at this point about whether a deliberate assignment of a case marker will result
in attaching an accusative case marker to the object of a transitive clause. How do we
justify the nature of ‘absolutive case’ in such instances? A simple answer to the query
would be, we do not need to justify the nature of absolutive case in that situation, as
the verb does not show agreement with the object of the transitive clause when it is
overtly case marked with an accusative case marker. There would be a mismatch in
the features required by the definition of ‘ergativity’ and when the definitional
requirements are not met, the system does not care to explain the nature of ‘absolutive
case’ with the object of the transitive clause as it does not remain ‘absolutive’ any
way. It seems that the function of an absolutive case is something what ‘Generativists’
distinguish between ‘structural case’ and ‘morphological case’. The absolutive case of
‘Ergative-absolutive’ patterning seems to be ‘structural’ in nature.
6
The data in examples (3-4) above present the system of ‘Nominativeaccusative’. It has been explained earlier that there is no difference in the case
marking of the subject (SI) of an intransitive clause or the Subject (Agentive) of a
transitive clause in such type. There is also no difference between the subject of an
intransitive clause and that of a transitive with regard to the agreement pattern of the
language. One can hypothesize based on this account that there is no object-verb
agreement in the languages that pertain to the ‘Nominative-accusative’ type.
7